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theguardian Winner of the Pulitzer prize
Believing that life is fair might make you
a terrible person
Faced with injustice, we'll try to alleviate it — but, if we can't, we'll do the next best thing,
psychologically speaking: blame the victims of the injustice
Flow much sympathy you hove for this woman probably depends on whether you feel the universe is o just place
Oliver Burkeman: Feb. 3, 2015
If you've been following the news recently, you know that human beings are terrible and everything is
appalling. Yet the sheer range of ways we find to sabotage our efforts to make the world a better place
continues to astonish. Did you know, for example, that last week's commemorations of the liberation of
Auschwitz may have marginally increased the prevalence of antisemitism in the modern world, despite
being partly intended as a warning against its consequences? Or that reading about the eye-popping state
of economic inequality could make you less likely to support politicians who want to do something about
it?
These are among numerous unsettling implications of the "just-world hypothesis", a psychological bias
explored in a new essay by Nicholas Hune-Brown at Hazlitt. The world, obviously, is a manifestly unjust
place: people are always meeting fates they didn't deserve, or not receiving rewards they did deserve for
hard work or virtuous behavior. Yet several decades of research have established that our need to believe
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otherwise runs deep. Faced with evidence of injustice, we'll certainly try to alleviate it if we can — but, if
we feel powerless to make things right, we'll do the next best thing, psychologically speaking: we'll
convince ourselves that the world isn't so unjust after all.
Hence the finding, in a 2009 study, that Holocaust memorials can increase antisemitism. Confronted with
an atrocity they otherwise can't explain, people become slightly more likely, on average, to believe that
the victims must have brought it on themselves.
The classic experiment demonstrating the just-world effect took place in 1966, when Melvyn Lerner and
Carolyn Simmons showed people what they claimed were live images of a woman receiving agonizing
electric shocks for her poor performance in a memory test. Given the option to alleviate her suffering by
ending the shocks, almost everybody did so: humans may be terrible, but most of us don't go around
being consciously and deliberately awful. When denied any option to halt her punishment, however —
when forced to just sit and watch her apparently suffer — the participants adjusted their opinions of the
woman downwards, as if to convince themselves her agony wasn't so indefensible because she wasn't
really such an innocent victim. "The sight of an innocent person suffering without possibility of reward or
compensation", Lerner and Simmons concluded, "motivated people to devalue the attractiveness of the
victim in order to bring about a more appropriate fit between her fate and her character." It's easy to see
how a similar psychological process might lead, say, to the belief that victims of sexual assault were
"asking for it": if you can convince yourself of that, you can avoid acknowledging the horror of the
situation.
What's truly unsettling about the just-world bias is that while it can have truly unpleasant effects, these
follow from what seems like the entirely understandable urge to believe that things happen for a reason.
After all, if we didn't all believe that to some degree, life would be an intolerably chaotic and terrifying
nightmare in, which effort and payback were utterly unrelated, and there was no point planning for the
future, saving money for retirement or doing anything else in hope of eventual reward. We'd go mad.
Surely wanting the world to make a bit more sense than that is eminently forgivable?
Yet, ironically, this desire to believe that things happen for a reason leads to the kinds of positions that
help entrench injustice instead of reducing it.
Hune-Brown cites another recent bit of evidence for the phenomenon: people with a strong belief in a
just world, he reports, are more likely to oppose affirmative action schemes intended to help women or
minorities. You needn't be explicitly racist or sexist to hold such views, nor committed to a highly
individualistic political position (such as libertarianism); the researchers controlled for those. You need
only cling to a conviction that the world is basically fair. That might be a pretty naive position, of course —
but it's hard to argue that it's a hateful one. Similar associations have been found between belief in a just
world and a preference for authoritarian political leaders. To shield ourselves psychologically from the
terrifying thought that the world is full of innocent people suffering, we endorse politicians and policies
more likely to make that suffering worse.
All of which is another reminder of a truth that's too often forgotten in our era of extreme political
polarization and 24/7 internet outrage: wrong opinions — even deeply obnoxious opinions — needn't
necessarily stem from obnoxious motivations. "Victim-blaming" provides the clearest example: barely a
day goes by without some commentator being accused (often rightly) of implying that somebody's
suffering was their own fault. That's a viewpoint that should be condemned, of course: it's unquestionably
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unpleasant to suggest that the victims of, say, the Charlie Hebdo killings, brought their fates upon
themselves. But the just-world hypothesis shows how such opinions need not be the consequence of a
deep character fault on the part of the blamer, or some tiny kernel of evil in their soul. It might simply
result from a strong need to feel that the world remains orderly, and that things still make some kind of
sense.
Facing the truth — that the world visits violence and poverty and discrimination upon people capriciously,
with little regard for what they've done to deserve it — is much scarier. Because, if there's no good
explanation for why any specific person is suffering, it's far harder to escape the frightening conclusion
that it could easily be you next.
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